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The Kurds - (Flashpoints) by Mandana Hendessi


FormatPaperback

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About this item

Highlights

  • The Kurds are the fourth largest ethnic group in the Middle East.
  • About the Author: Mandana Hendessi has worked for overseas aid programmes in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan since 2003.
  • 192 Pages
  • History, Middle East
  • Series Name: Flashpoints

Description



About the Book



A contemporary overview and critical analysis of the Kurds quest for national identity and statehood from the end of the Ottoman Empire to the modern day.



Book Synopsis



The Kurds are the fourth largest ethnic group in the Middle East. An Indigenous people from the Mesopotamian plains and highlands in what is now Southeast Turkey, Northeast Syria, Northern Iraq, northwest Iran and Southwest Armenia, they are the largest stateless people in the world. Denied a national identity, their culture and language have been banned or suppressed throughout the centuries and theirs is a story of resistance and survival.

This book offers a contemporary overview and critical analysis of the Kurds quest for national identity and statehood from the end of the Ottoman Empire to the modern day. Kurdish nationalism has taken many forms and had to endure periods of rebellion, acceptance, oppression and ethnic cleansing. Mandana Hendessi outlines the contours of the political struggle and military conflict that continue to shape the lives of a people that occupy one of the most contested regions in the world.



Review Quotes




Hendessi offers a thoughtful and succinct account of historical and contemporary Kurdish politics. She provides a masterful overview of a complex case, which is much needed.--Zeynep Kaya, University of Sheffield

A very welcome book. An accessible introduction to the study of Kurdish history.--Philip Kreyenbroek, Institute of Iranian Studies, University of Göttingen



About the Author



Mandana Hendessi has worked for overseas aid programmes in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan since 2003. Most recently she was Programme Manager for Norwegian People's Aid in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq. She was awarded an OBE in 2004 for her support for Iraqi women to achieve a 25 per cent quota for parliamentary representation, a right that was enshrined in Iraq's constitution in 2005.

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